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Fubing system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Fubing system (府兵制), also romanized as Fu-ping , was a local militia system existing in China between 6th century and 8th century. It originated in the Western Wei dynasty, and was subsequentl...
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Chinese armies (pre-1911) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Fuping - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fuping may refer to: •Fu-Ping, Fubing system, local militia system existing in China between 6th and 8th century •Fuping County, Hebei, in Baoding, Hebei, China •Fuping County, Shaanxi, in Weinan, Sh...
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the Tang's new military system that was not covered in the fubing system. This ... military system after the collapse of the fubing system.4 His Japanese ...
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Partly this is due to a different kind of military system that was present during the Han and the Tang. The Tang fubing system, based on individual peasant-soldiers, inherited from the Northern Wei, was a more effective system than the buqu system of the Han.
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To secure manpower and economic resources for military needs, Tang rulers carried on the fubing system, a peasant-soldier reserve system established by the Northern Wei Dynasty (386-535; established in north China by Turks), as the main source for new recruitments.
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Under the fubing system each headquarters (府) commanded about one thousand farmer-soldiers who could be mobilised for war. ...
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In the early Tang era, the military used the Fubing Military system. The Fubing system is where everyone in the army fights together. In the late Tang Dynasty, the Fubing system was changed to the Mubing system. A person is chosen to be in the military by a commander and they stay with him.
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Hongwu kept a powerful army organized on a military system known as the weisuo system, which was similar to the fubing system of the Tang Dynasty. According to Ming Shigao, the political intention in establishing the weisuo system was to maintain a strong army while avoiding bonds between commanding officers and soldiers.
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Faced with the prospect of being away from home for years, fewer and fewer volunteers were available to join these armies under the previously existing fubing system by which each man was allotted a sufficient piece of land to feed himself and his family.
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